Arch Hall Sr: Drive-In Producer

Arch Hall Sr in Eegah (1962)

Arch Hall Sr was born on 21 December 1908.

He lived an interesting life. Jack Webb immortalized him in the film The Last Time I Saw Archie. Hall was apparently writer William Bowers’s friend during World War II and effectively stole the idea. (Or not. It’s hard to tell.)

Before the war, Hall worked in radio and as a stuntman and bit player in the movies. But we aren’t discussing him for any of this.

In the early 1960s, Hall formed what was originally a distribution company and eventually a production company, Fairway International Pictures. It released roughly a dozen films through the early 1970s. This included a notable film that Hall had no direct association with, The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies.

Arch Hall Sr wrote and produced most of the Fairway films. Like exploitation filmmakers everywhere, he was just trying to make a buck. He produced films specifically for the drive-in market. And they seem to have done well because he kept making them. He made them on a shoestring, of course. They are a lot better than their budgets would indicate.

His son, Arch Hall Jr, starred in most of his films. He’s not bad! But Jr didn’t have the face of a star. But he grew into his face and could certainly have been a good character actor.

I haven’t seen most of Arch Hall Sr’s films. It might make for a good article to watch them all. At this point, I only remember watching his first two: Choppers and Eegah. Most people only know the latter because of Mystery Science Theater 3000. It’s a clever film. It seems so much bigger than it is. Plus, it is shot in color — not something common in early 1960s low-budget features. And it has a great surfer soundtrack, a cool jalopy, and a helicopter.

It also stars Richard Kiel — 15 years before he became a star as Jaws in The Spy Who Loved Me. Arch Hall Sr directed the film — his only. He does a fine job of it. I’m not sure why he didn’t direct again.

Let’s celebrate his birthday by watching the film!


Arch Hall Sr in Eegah (1962) via Wikimedia. It is in the public domain.

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